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This is Scientific American's 60-Second Tech. I'm Larry Greenemeier. Got a minute?

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Existing privacy laws are disconnected from the ways we communicate electronically today.

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The FBI made headlines again recently for its lobbying efforts to make the Web easier to wiretap.

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And Congress is trying to figure out whether a law that predates the Web by several years can protect access to your old e-mails.

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The 1986 Electronic Communications Privacy Act was mostly aimed at protecting digital messages in transit.

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The Act existed before the widespread use of email and of massive computer memory that could easily store decades' worth of messages.

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The law thus considers information that such as e-mail "abandoned" if it's stored for more than 180 days on a service provider's server.

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If law enforcement wants access to an abandoned e-mail, it only has to claim need for an investigation.

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A little good news.

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The Justice Department supports requiring police to get a warrant to read your e-mail.

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Vermont Senator Patrick Leahy agrees, and is trying to get a law passed to make that official.

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Legal protection would be a lot better than picking through and deleting years of forgotten messages in your personal inbox.

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Thanks for the minute, for Scientific American's 60-Second Tech. I'm Larry Greenemeier.

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